Fung v. Chang

384 P.2d 303, 47 Haw. 149, 1963 Haw. LEXIS 83
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1963
Docket4220
StatusPublished

This text of 384 P.2d 303 (Fung v. Chang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fung v. Chang, 384 P.2d 303, 47 Haw. 149, 1963 Haw. LEXIS 83 (haw 1963).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

LEWIS, J.

By tbe judgment below plaintiffs-appellees, Joseph and Catherine Fung, were awarded damages for property damage and personal injuries sustained in 1957 when a retaining wall on property of the adjoining owner, defendant-appellant Charlotte M. Chang, gave way and rocks and debris descended upon their property below. A co-defendant, Robert Chang, though held liable jointly and severally with Charlotte M. Chang, has not appealed. Ap *150 pellant’s position is that the liability was solely that of her co-defendant.

At the time of the collapse of the wall appellant was divorced from Robert Chang, and was the sole owner of the property, which had been deeded to her prior to the divorce. In 1953, when the wall was bnilt and backfilled to. create a level lot for the Changs, they were husband and wife and owned the property as tenants by the entirety.

It is undisputed that appellant wanted the lot made level in preparation for the building of a new home afterward constructed. She testified: “I wanted it as level as possible for the children.” It also is undisputed that she knew this required the construction of a retaining wall.

Appellant further testified that: “I had no idea when I said I wanted a level lot for the children, how high it was going to be.” However, as a frequent visitor to the site she observed the construction of the wall and back-filling thereof. Thus she knew that the level of the Chang property was being placed eighteen feet above the level of the adjoining Fung property. She never made any objection to the height of the wall.

In appellant’s own words she “left the details of construction” to her husband and one Norman Mundy. The latter drew a plan for the wall. According to this plan, the Chang wall was to be toed in behind a wall previously built on the Fung property; the footing was to be placed three feet below the top of the Fung wall, which would be one foot above the Fung ground level; the height of the wall was to be fifteen feet above the top of the Fung wall.

There was evidence that the excavation for the footing should have been at least three feet below the Fung ground level, and the width of the footing, shown on the plan as a minimum of thirty inches, should have been four and a half inches for every foot of height. This evidence was *151 given by a structural engineer called by plaintiffs-appellees. He testified that the required wall width would vary with soil conditions; a mucky soil, such as the adobe soil in this vicinity, required the greater width of footing to which he testified.

Mr. Mundy, who drew the plan for the wall in question, was not an engineer. He was a friend of defendant Robert Chang with experience in stone wall work. No contractor was employed. Robert Chang built the wall himself on week ends, superintending the work of masons who worked under him at the contracting firm where he then was employed as a general construction superintendent. This firm “specialized in only masonry work” including stone walls such as the one he built. Before he built this wall he had supervised the construction of quite a number of retaining walls, but on cross-examination as to the principal ones he conceded they were planned by engineers. It does not appear that he had had any experience in designing walls. His experience was in building walls designed by others.

As to the work done, Robert Chang testified that he commenced building the wall at the street where the Chang property abutted that of another owner, Kau; that where the Kau property joined the Fung property, hereinafter referred to as the “Kau-Fung comer” or the “corner,” the wall was eighteen feet high and was built with a footing seven feet wide at a depth of three feet below the ground level of the Fung property; that this was “exceptional in there. We put in a lot because we knew that would be the section bearing the brunt of the pressure”; that at the point of beginning on the street the wall was only two and a half feet high; that as the work progressed toward the aforesaid comer the height of the wall increased; that the footing as built varied in width, increasing with the height of the wall; that the “minimum width” along the *152 Fung boundary was “roughly five feet”; that the excavation for the footing varied in depth according to where the workers hit solid rock; that when they hit solid rock they built on it; that the thirty-inch minimum footing indicated on the plan did not mean that was sufficient for the height of wall indicated; that it was the intention of the plan that he (Robert Chang) use his experience and judgment in determining the width of the footing in relation to the height; that he applied the same principles in building this wall as had been applied in constructing others where he had been employed as supervisor. He further testified that the fill directly behind the wall consisted of gravel and rocks, in other words the adobe soil natural in that vicinity was not directly behind the wall.

However, according to the contractor who built the wall that replaced the collapsed wall, the footing was only two to three feet wide at a point along the Fung boundary 1 where he was able to observe it after the collapse, thirty-five feet from the Kau-Fung comer, and the footing was above the ground level of the Fung lot; the height of the wall was eighteen feet above the ground level; and the backfill material consisted of boulders, tree stumps, beer cans, and a “lot of soil on top,” which he said was the adobe soil of the vicinity. A picture taken by plaintiff Joseph Fung during construction showed that the footing was placed considerably above the ground level of the Fung lot.

Defendant Robert Chang put on an expert witness, a licensed engineer with experience in structural engineering and investigation of soils, who testified that adobe soil expands from ten per cent to two times in volume when wet, depending on the type of adobe. He made a test *153 demonstrating a sixty per cent expansion of a sample of adobe soil taken in the vicinity in question. He testified: “One of the biggest reasons for a collapse would be * * * the expansion of the soil * * *”; that “the usual retaining wall is based on a back fill of a nonexpansive nature, something like sand * * * you usually compute your pressure on that basis.” Speaking of the hillside in this section he said “there is a slow movement downhill” and he thought this was one of the causes for the collapse of the wall.

This witness further testified that the walls in the vicinity “all” were built in about the manner Robert Chang had testified that this one was built; that they were the type of wall constructed by a contractor without an engineer having designed it. However, other testimony showed that it was the policy of the City and County Building Department 2 that a licensed architect or engineer must sign the plans for a wall more than five feet in height. The height of the other walls to which the witness referred was not shown and presumably they were not of comparable height.

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Bluebook (online)
384 P.2d 303, 47 Haw. 149, 1963 Haw. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fung-v-chang-haw-1963.